247–8
Owen 194
Proudhon 108–112
Ricardo 259, 304
Shakespeare 19–20
Smith (Adam) 259, 304
Swift 305, 309–10
tradition of Trier 9–10
Tremaux 364–5
Tristram Shandy 25, 307–8
Urquhart 208–13
von Westphalen (Baron) 18–19
Weitling 101–5
Literary works:
juvenile poetry 22–5
Oulanem 3–4, 26
Scorpion and Felix 25–6
Love-life:
engagement 18–21, 33, 48–50
falls in love 17
fathersillegitimate child 171–6
marriage 52
Movements:
applies for British citizenship 356–7
28 Dean Street 166–219
44 Maitland Park Road 359–83
64 Dean Street 152–66
9 Grafton Terrace 219–66
arrives in England 148–52
Belgium (1845) 90–126
Bonn (1841) 34
Cologne (1842) 34–9, 40–9
Cologne (1848–9) ‘the mad year’ 130–47
expelled from Belgium 126
expelled from Paris 90
leaves Germany (1848) 61–2
Modena Villas 266–359
Paris (1843–5) 61–91
Paris (1848) 126–30
Paris (1849) 147–8
Prussian citizenship 130–1, 245–8
tours Europe (1882) 377–9
visits Germany (1862) 246–8
visits Germany (1867) 295–8
Police harassment:
arrested 126
brushes with censors 45–8
harassed by Prussian authorities 136–7, 139, 143–7
spied upon 162–4, 170, 179, 337, 342
Political involvements:
Communist League 112, 116–19, 128, 130–1, 133–4, 151, 153, 165–6, 186, 191, 196–7, 239–40, 269
Doctors’ Club 26, 32, 34, 36–7, 39
German Workers’ Education Society 117–18, 124, 151, 153–5, 167–8
International Working Men’s Association 276–88, 314, 318–26, 330–47, 350
Reform League 287–8
Thoughts and beliefs:
advocates abolition of inheritance 129
ambivalent attitude towards England 200–06
anti-Semitism 55–7, 242–3, 247–8, 341
attitude towards English proletariat 205–7
awaits English revolution 200–5
challenges perception that French revolution of 1848 was a failure 156–7
cites Paris as centre of European revolution 61
contempt for country life 96
criticises Belgium government 138–9
criticises German bourgeoisie 141
discovers communism 44–5
dislike for French socialists 350–5
early lack of great architectural vision 73–4
early thoughts on class struggle 59
experiments in patriarchal communism 62
fantasises about the outcome of Franco-Prussian War 321–3
fascination with Promethean legend 50–1, 72–3
historical materialism 95–7, 108–110, 270
inverts Hegel 53–4
move from idealism to materialism 35–6
on nature of bourgeoisie119–22
on capital 69–70
on commodity 302–4
on destiny 27, 35
on European proletariat 68
on labour 71–2
on military interests 324, 362
on productivity 301
on property 70
on the nature of revolution 67–8
on the tyranny of religion 57–9
opinion of a poet’s character 21
opinion of England 254–8
opinions of communist libertinism 66, 74
outlines the advantages of a state bank 129
questions England’s imperviousness to revolution 142
student of capitalism 5
vague humanism 73–4
welcomes Third Republic 324
Marx, Laura 20, 174, 220, 264, 267–8. 284, 290–2, 295, 326, 350, 386
Marx, Luise 8
Marx, Sophie 19
Marx-Engels Institute (Moscow) 227
Mazzini, Giuseppe 279–80, 331–2
Mein Prozess gegen die Allgemeine Zeitung (‘My Lawsuit Against the Allgemeine Zeitung ’) (Vogt) 239–40
Metternich, Prince Klemens Wenzel Nepomuk Lothar 65–6, 125
Meyen, Eduard 44
Mill, John Stuart 321
Modern Thought 372–3
Moll, Joseph 98, 112
Moore, Samuel 124, 172
Napoleon III 275, 320–1
National Zeitung 241–2
Nechayev, Sergei 338, 345–7
Neue Oder-Zeitung 180, 200, 204
Neue Rheinische Zeitung 130–46, 167, 190, 197, 317
Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Politischökonomische Revue 156–7
New York Daily Tribune 180, 186–7, 204, 210–11, 223–4, 233, 245, 249, 255
New Yorker 5
Nicholas I, Tsar 47–8
Northen Star 153, 195–6
Obolensky, Princess 318–9
Observer 334
O’Connor, Feargus 196
Odger, George 275–6, 287–8, 330
Old Testament
Rebecca Winters
Charlotte Montague
Christine Danse
Dan Danko, Tom Mason, Barry Gott
Evie Knight
Pamela Beason
Raymond Henri
Thomas Gifford
Mandy Rosko
Rachel Hauck